13 results on '"Jonna Mazet"'
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2. A novel SARS-CoV-2 related coronavirus in bats from Cambodia
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Deborah Delaune, Vibol Hul, Erik A. Karlsson, Alexandre Hassanin, Tey Putita Ou, Artem Baidaliuk, Fabiana Gámbaro, Matthieu Prot, Vuong Tan Tu, Sokha Chea, Lucy Keatts, Jonna Mazet, Christine K. Johnson, Philippe Buchy, Philippe Dussart, Tracey Goldstein, Etienne Simon-Lorière, and Veasna Duong
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Science - Abstract
In this study, Delaune et al., isolate and characterise a SARS-CoV-2-related coronavirus from two bats sampled in Cambodia. Their findings suggest that the geographic distribution of SARS-CoV-2-related viruses is wider than previously reported.
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- 2021
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3. Causes of Mortality of Northern Sea Otters (Enhydra lutris kenyoni) in Alaska From 2002 to 2012
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Kathleen Ann Burek Huntington, Verena Ann Gill, Amanda M. Berrian, Tracey Goldstein, Pam Tuomi, Barbara A. Byrne, Kristin Worman, and Jonna Mazet
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northern sea otter ,Enhydra lutris kenyoni ,Alaska ,stranding ,mortality ,Strep syndrome ,Science ,General. Including nature conservation, geographical distribution ,QH1-199.5 - Abstract
Most of the world’s sea otters reside in Alaska, but there has never been an assessment of long-term mortality patterns for this keystone predator. We examined data collected from 780 northern sea otter (Enhydra lutris kenyoni) carcasses recovered in Alaska from 2002 to 2012 to evaluate the causes of mortality and risk factors associated with death. A smaller group (n = 144, 18%) of fresh non-frozen carcasses were included in a more detailed mortality analysis. Forty-four% of the fresh dead otters were determined to have died from infectious endocarditis, meningoencephalitis, and/or septicemia due to systemic streptococcosis (“Strep syndrome”). Streptococcus lutetiensis, a member of the Streptococcus bovis/equinus (SB/E) group was most commonly isolated, although other members of the SB/E group were identified. There were fewer cases where S. phocae and other streptococci were isolated. A regression analysis revealed age and location risk factors for Strep syndrome. Subadults were the highest risk age group, and otters recovered from the Kachemak Bay region were 3.6 times (95% CI: 2.2–5.9) more likely to die from Strep syndrome than otters recovered elsewhere. Diagnosis of this Strep syndrome had not been reported in other marine mammals in Alaska. Sporadic cases of septicemia and infectious endocarditis due to S. lutetiensis have been seen in the southern sea otter population in California. Other causes of death for the fresh otters included neurologic diseases (10%), trauma (8%), nutritional diseases (7%), cardiovascular diseases (7%), gastrointestinal diseases /parasites (6%), undetermined (5%), septicemia (3%), and neoplasia (3%). All other causes of death (oiling, hepatobiliary, fungal, marine biotoxins, pulmonary) were at or below 1%. Twenty percent of fresh animals were positive for phocine distemper virus (PDV) by polymerase chain reaction (PCR, 11/55), 18% seropositive for PDV (7/38), and paramyxovirus-like particles were demonstrated by electron microscopy within inclusion bodies from one animal. Low concentrations of the harmful algal bloom toxins domoic acid and saxitoxin were also detected in 26% and 22% of fresh animals, respectively. Protozoal disease was rare. These patterns of disease differ from sea otters in other regions and possible reasons are discussed.
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- 2021
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4. Checklist for One Health Epidemiological Reporting of Evidence (COHERE)
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Meghan F. Davis, Shelley C. Rankin, Janna M. Schurer, Stephen Cole, Lisa Conti, Peter Rabinowitz, Gregory Gray, Laura Kahn, Catharine Machalaba, Jonna Mazet, Marguerite Pappaioanou, Jan Sargeant, Andrew Thompson, Scott Weese, and Jakob Zinnstag
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One Health ,Reporting guidelines ,Observational studies ,Epidemiology ,Environmental health ,Medicine (General) ,R5-920 - Abstract
One Health is defined as the intersection and integration of knowledge regarding humans, animals, and the environment, yet as the One Health scientific literature expands, there is considerable heterogeneity of approach and quality of reporting in One Health studies. In addition, many researchers who publish such studies do not include or integrate data from all three domains of human, animal, and environmental health. This points to a critical need to unify guidelines for One Health studies. This report details the Checklist for One Health Epidemiological Reporting of Evidence (COHERE) to guide the design and publication format of future One Health studies. COHERE was developed by a core writing team and international expert review group that represents multiple disciplines, including human medicine, veterinary medicine, public health, allied professionals, clinical laboratory science, epidemiology, the social sciences, ecohealth and environmental health. The twin aims of the COHERE standards are to 1) improve the quality of reporting of observational or interventional epidemiological studies that collect and integrate data from humans, animals and/or vectors, and their environments; and 2) promote the concept that One Health studies should integrate knowledge from these three domains. The 19 standards in the COHERE checklist address descriptions of human populations, animal populations, environmental assessment, spatial and temporal relationships of data from the three domains, integration of analyses and interpretation, and inclusion of expertise in the research team from disciplines related to human health, animal health, and environmental health.
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- 2017
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5. Detection of novel coronaviruses in bats in Myanmar.
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Marc T Valitutto, Ohnmar Aung, Kyaw Yan Naing Tun, Megan E Vodzak, Dawn Zimmerman, Jennifer H Yu, Ye Tun Win, Min Thein Maw, Wai Zin Thein, Htay Htay Win, Jasjeet Dhanota, Victoria Ontiveros, Brett Smith, Alexandre Tremeau-Brevard, Tracey Goldstein, Christine K Johnson, Suzan Murray, and Jonna Mazet
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Medicine ,Science - Abstract
The recent emergence of bat-borne zoonotic viruses warrants vigilant surveillance in their natural hosts. Of particular concern is the family of coronaviruses, which includes the causative agents of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), Middle East respiratory syndrome (MERS), and most recently, Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19), an epidemic of acute respiratory illness originating from Wuhan, China in December 2019. Viral detection, discovery, and surveillance activities were undertaken in Myanmar to identify viruses in animals at high risk contact interfaces with people. Free-ranging bats were captured, and rectal and oral swabs and guano samples collected for coronaviral screening using broadly reactive consensus conventional polymerase chain reaction. Sequences from positives were compared to known coronaviruses. Three novel alphacoronaviruses, three novel betacoronaviruses, and one known alphacoronavirus previously identified in other southeast Asian countries were detected for the first time in bats in Myanmar. Ongoing land use change remains a prominent driver of zoonotic disease emergence in Myanmar, bringing humans into ever closer contact with wildlife, and justifying continued surveillance and vigilance at broad scales.
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- 2020
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6. Correction: Correction: A Novel Rhabdovirus Associated with Acute Hemorrhagic Fever in Central Africa.
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Gilda Grard, Joseph N Fair, Deanna Lee, Elizabeth Slikas, Imke Steffen, Jean-Jacques Muyembe, Taylor Sittler, Narayanan Veeraraghavan, J Graham Ruby, Chunlin Wang, Maria Makuwa, Prime Mulembakani, Robert B Tesh, Jonna Mazet, Anne W Rimoin, Travis Taylor, Bradley S Schneider, Graham Simmons, Eric Delwart, Nathan D Wolfe, Charles Y Chiu, and Eric M Leroy
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
[This corrects the article DOI: 10.1371/journal.ppat.1002924.].
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- 2017
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7. Correction: A Novel Rhabdovirus Associated with Acute Hemorrhagic Fever in Central Africa.
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Gilda Grard, Joseph N Fair, Deanna Lee, Elizabeth Slikas, Imke Steffen, Jean-Jacques Muyembe, Taylor Sittler, Narayanan Veeraraghavan, J Graham Ruby, Chunlin Wang, Maria Makuwa, Prime Mulembakani, Robert B Tesh, Jonna Mazet, Anne W Rimoin, Travis Taylor, Bradley S Schneider, Graham Simmons, Eric Delwart, Nathan D Wolfe, Charles Y Chiu, and Eric M Leroy
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Published
- 2016
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8. A novel rhabdovirus associated with acute hemorrhagic fever in central Africa.
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Gilda Grard, Joseph N Fair, Deanna Lee, Elizabeth Slikas, Imke Steffen, Jean-Jacques Muyembe, Taylor Sittler, Narayanan Veeraraghavan, J Graham Ruby, Chunlin Wang, Maria Makuwa, Prime Mulembakani, Robert B Tesh, Jonna Mazet, Anne W Rimoin, Travis Taylor, Bradley S Schneider, Graham Simmons, Eric Delwart, Nathan D Wolfe, Charles Y Chiu, and Eric M Leroy
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Immunologic diseases. Allergy ,RC581-607 ,Biology (General) ,QH301-705.5 - Abstract
Deep sequencing was used to discover a novel rhabdovirus (Bas-Congo virus, or BASV) associated with a 2009 outbreak of 3 human cases of acute hemorrhagic fever in Mangala village, Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Africa. The cases, presenting over a 3-week period, were characterized by abrupt disease onset, high fever, mucosal hemorrhage, and, in two patients, death within 3 days. BASV was detected in an acute serum sample from the lone survivor at a concentration of 1.09 × 10(6) RNA copies/mL, and 98.2% of the genome was subsequently de novo assembled from ≈ 140 million sequence reads. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that BASV is highly divergent and shares less than 34% amino acid identity with any other rhabdovirus. High convalescent neutralizing antibody titers of >1:1000 were detected in the survivor and an asymptomatic nurse directly caring for him, both of whom were health care workers, suggesting the potential for human-to-human transmission of BASV. The natural animal reservoir host or arthropod vector and precise mode of transmission for the virus remain unclear. BASV is an emerging human pathogen associated with acute hemorrhagic fever in Africa.
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- 2012
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9. A Community-Based Approach to Explore Challenging and Sensitive Issues: Hunting, Wild Meat Consumption, and Zoonotic Disease Risks in Tanzania
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Sijali Zikankuba, David Wolking, Elizabeth VanWormer, Christopher Kilonzo, Jonna Mazet, and Rudovick Kazwala
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- 2023
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10. Predicting the potential for zoonotic transmission and host associations for novel viruses
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Pranav Pandit, Simon Anthony, Tracey Goldstein, Kevin Olival, Megan Doyle, Nicole Gardner, Brian Bird, Woutrina Smith, David Wolking, Kristen Gilardi, Corina Monagin, Terra Kelly, Marcela Uhart, Jonathan Epstein, Catherine Machalaba, Melinda Rostal, Patrick Dawson, Emily Hagan, Ava Sullivan, Hongying Li, Aleksei Chmura, Alice Latinne, Christian Lange, Tammie O'Rourke, Sarah Olson, Lucy Keatts, A. Patricia Mendoza, Alberto Perez, Catia Dejuste de Paula, Dawn Zimmerman, Marc Valitutto, Matthew LeBreton, David McIver, Ariful Islam, Veasna Duong, Moctar Mouiche, Zheng-Li Shi, Prime Mulembakani, Charles Kumakamba, Mohamed Ali, Nigatu Kebede, Ubald Tamoufe, Samuel Bel-Nono, Alpha Camara, Joko Pamungkas, Julien Kalpy Coulibaly, Ehab Abu-Basha, Joseph Kamau, Soubanh Silithammavong, James Desmond, Tom Hughes, Enkhtuvshin Shiilegdamba, Ohnmar Aung, Dibesh Karmacharya, Julius Nziza, Daouda Ndiaye, Aiah Gbakima, Zikankuba Sijali, Supaporn Wacharapluesadee, Erika Alandia Robles, Benard Ssebide, Gerardo Suzán, Luis Aguirre, Monica Solorio, Tapan Dhole, Peta Hitchens, Damien Joly, Karen Saylors, Amanda Fine, Suzan Murray, William Karesh, Peter Daszak, Jonna Mazet, PREDICT Consortium, and Christine Johnson
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viruses ,Zoonoses ,Africa ,Viruses ,Medicine (miscellaneous) ,Animals ,Humans ,Animals, Wild ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,Host Specificity - Abstract
Host-virus associations have co-evolved under ecological and evolutionary selection pressures that shape cross-species transmission and spillover to humans. Observed virus-host associations provide relevant context for newly discovered wildlife viruses to assess knowledge gaps in host range and estimate pathways for potential human infection. Using models to predict virus-host networks, we predicted the likelihood of humans as host for 513 newly discovered viruses detected by large scale wildlife surveillance at high-risk animal-human interfaces in Africa, Asia, and Latin America. Predictions indicated that novel coronaviruses are likely to infect a greater number of host species than viruses from other families. Our models further characterize novel viruses through prioritization scores and directly inform surveillance targets to identify host ranges for newly discovered viruses.
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- 2021
11. Health of African Buffalos (
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Annette, Roug, Epaphras Alex, Muse, Deana L, Clifford, Goodluck, Paul, Donald, Mpanduji, George, Makingi, Walter, Magesa, Emmanuel, Josephat, Jonna, Mazet, Brian, Bird, Daniel, Mathayo, Rudovick, Kazwala, Halima, Kiwango, and Woutrina, Smith
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Male ,Buffaloes ,Virus Diseases ,Parasitic Diseases, Animal ,Body Composition ,Animals ,Female ,Bacterial Infections ,Tanzania - Abstract
In association with a study investigating the apparent decline of African buffalos (
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- 2019
12. SpillOver: A new tool for ranking the risk of viral spillover to humans using big data
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Zoë Grange, Tracey Goldstein, Christine Johnson, Simon Anthony, Kirsten Gilardi, Peter Daszak, Kevin Olival, Tammie O'Rourke, Suzan Murray, PREDICT Consortium, and Jonna Mazet
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General Veterinary ,Ranking ,Spillover effect ,business.industry ,Big data ,Econometrics ,Business - Published
- 2019
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13. Overview
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Jonna Mazet
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- 2002
- Full Text
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